I've tried many things, but have ultimately failed to get the build for gulp-pipeline-rails running. The script runs locally, no problem.
The last problem I've narrowed down is that I have a ruby language project that utilizes node, but I need node 5. I found one snippet:
#------------------------------
# Update the node version
env:
- TRAVIS_NODE_VERSION="5"
install:
- pwd
- rm -rf ~/.nvm && git clone https://github.com/creationix/nvm.git ~/.nvm && (cd ~/.nvm && git checkout `git describe --abbrev=0 --tags`) && source ~/.nvm/nvm.sh && nvm install $TRAVIS_NODE_VERSION
- npm install
While this seems to get node updated, it does something to my ruby env where it fails to execute rspec:
$ pwd && bundle exec rake
/home/travis/build/alienfast/gulp-pipeline-rails
Could not find gem 'rspec' in any of the gem sources listed in your Gemfile or available on this machine.
Run `bundle install` to install missing gems.
Question
With all that said, how do I simply use Node 5 with this .travis.yml?
language: ruby
rvm:
- 2.2.2
- ruby-head
matrix:
allow_failures:
- rvm: ruby-head
cache: bundler
#------------------------------
# Setup
before_script:
- node -v
# update npm
- npm install npm -g
# install Gulp 4 CLI tools globally from 4.0 GitHub branch
- npm install https://github.com/gulpjs/gulp-cli/tarball/4.0 -g
#------------------------------
# Build
script: bundle exec rake
Try using a before_install stage for adding a second language on Travis, maybe something like:
before_install:
- nvm install node
nvm should be installed by default on the Travis build image (depending on which one you're using), and this command will install the latest version of Node.
After that, maybe just have npm install -g gulp-cli#4.0 as the first step in your before_script stage (i.e. don't worry about updating npm), hopefully that should mean that bundler still runs fine and installs all your gems.
I found this article that helped me out quite a bit.
Relevant information from article:
You can use nvm to manage you node versions in travis, however you have to enable it first:
install:
- . $HOME/.nvm/nvm.sh
- nvm install stable
- nvm use stable
If the project's language is ruby, Travis CI will run bundle install --jobs=3 --retry=3 by default.
If you define an install stage yourself in .travis.yml, the default will not execute in favor of the newly specified commands. The thinking here is to have sane magic by default that should easily be overridden.
There are two solutions to this issue:
Add bundle install --jobs=3 --retry=3 to the install stage
Rename the header of the node replacement snippet to before_install as suggested by #ocean.
Related
After a thorough analysis of 'Could not execute command lessc' i've successfully ran odoo (any version) on my command line with python virtual env. Am doing this to run odoo in command line
$ . {PATH_TO_VIRTUAL_ENV}/bin/activate (Running the script in the current shell)
$ cd {PATH_TO_ODOO_SOURCE}
$ ./odoo.py -c setup.cfg
And the above runs with proper UI.
Now when trying to run the same from eclipse throws me 'Could not execute command lessc'. I did the below to run code from eclipse
Installed pydev plugin in eclipse Mars
Configured Python interpreter (Given the virtual env python path here. i.e {PATH_TO_VIRTUAL_ENV}/bin/python)
Setup odoo source
Specified the new python interpreter on the project properties -> python interpretor
Created a new Run Configuration to run the source with the custom setup file and with the new interpretor
Kindly throw me light on places where i miss. Also i've gone through links on setting up python virtual env in eclipse. They all say the same thing still this lessc dependency is somehow not linked. Please comment if you require more info to identify the error. Thanks for your help! :)
FYI am using mac.
Update
For Shikhar (based on his answer)
This problem is related to your bad configuration of Nodejs and less on system.
Use commands below to resolve this -
wget -qO- https://deb.nodesource.com/setup | sudo bash -
then
brew install node
and finally
sudo npm install -g less less-plugin-clean-css
This will resolve the lessc command issue.
try this
sudo apt-get install node-clean-css
sudo apt-get install node-less
The solution:
sudo apt-get install node-clean-css
sudo apt-get install node-less
may work for Global system installation but if you are working within a virtualenv you may try this.
If somebody had the issue inside PyCharm wich was my case and nothing else works...
I leave my solution here:
First: I tried to check if node and npm exist inside my virtualenv: node -v and npm -v, not any of them... Second: I was using virtualenv, also when I ask inside my virtualenv with: which lessc . I didn't receive any response neither, so... I keep googling and found this post: How to install lessc and nodejs in a Python virtualenv?
In any case this was what I did on my virtualenv and the problem was solved:
MYVIRTUALENV/bin/activate # switch to my Python virtualenv first
pip3.7 install nodeenv # install nodeenv nodeenv was installed, in case you are using python 2.x use pip instead pip3
nodeenv --python-virtualenv # Use current python virtualenv
npm install -g less # install lessc in the virtualenv
npm install -g less-plugin-clean-css # also install this less-plugin...
then if I check with node -v and npm -v I get a proper response...
also get good response on: which lessc
After that no more nightmare with lessc execution in pycharm
I am trying to install fastlane. I have Xcode installed. I installed fastlane using the command sudo gem install fastlane. I now go into my project folder and type fastlane init and get the error:
-bash: fastlane: command not found.
I see that fastlane is installed and can see it here
/Users/username/.gem/ruby/2.0.0/gems/fastlane-1.70.0/bin
on my Mac.
I tried adding this to my PATH, but I still get the same error. My path is
/usr/local/bin:/usr/bin:/bin:/usr/sbin:/sbin:./Users/username/.gem/ruby/2.0.0/gems/
What am I missing here?
Add the following line to your bash profile:
export PATH="$HOME/.fastlane/bin:$PATH"
You can either close the terminal session and restart it or run source ~/.bash_profile to load your configuration and then you can go so you start using fastlane 🚀
I got run into similar issue last week. I installed fastlane using homebrew on mac, but it was showing the same error.
I tried installing it using Ruby and it worked like a charm. Here is the command.
sudo gem install fastlane -NV
Also seems like you have not installed command line tools for xcode.
Install them using xcode-select --install
I met this issue because of installing zsh, the below two steps solve my problem:
open ~/.zshrc
save path
2.1 if you install fastlane with Homebrew
Copy export PATH="$HOME/.fastlane/bin:$PATH" on the bottom line.
2.2 if you install fastlane with RubyGems
Copy export PATH="/usr/local/bin/fastlane"" on the bottom line.
save upon file and try fastlane init, everything is OK!
In the terminal type cd ~/ to go to your home folder
Type touch .bash_profile to create your new empty file
Type open -e .bash_profile to open the file
Enter export PATH="$HOME/.fastlane/bin:$PATH" and save
Restart terminal (not sure needed?)
Here is what I installed on Mac - from scratch
Removed from brew install
brew uninstall fastlane
brew install rbenv
Install Ruby version 2.6.6
rbenv install 2.6.6
Set the Ruby version in global
rbenv global 2.6.6
Add Ruby to the PATH
if which rbenv > /dev/null; then eval "$(rbenv init -)"; fi
Install bundler
gem install bundler
Install fastlane
bundle add fastlane
fastlane is in cask now. You can install it using
brew cask install fastlane
Now you need to export PATH so that your shell can find fastlane
do
export PATH="$HOME/.fastlane/bin:$PATH"
If that doesn't work, try this
export PATH="$HOME/.fastlane/bin/fastlane_lib:$PATH"
Make sure you add it to ~/.profile, ~/.zshrc or ~/.bashrc for future
If you are working on local machine then add following to you .bash_profile
export PATH="$HOME/.fastlane/bin:$PATH"
If you are working on Jenkins then this worked for me 😎
Under Jenkins -> Manage Jenkins -> Configure System -> Global properties -> Environment variables I added:
Name: Path
Value: /bin:/usr/local/bin:/usr/bin:/bin:/usr/sbin:/sbin
Reference
brew install ruby
brew install fastlane
Warning: fastlane 2.145.0 is already installed, it's just not linked
You can use brew link fastlane to link this version.
brew link fastlane
cd iOS
fastlane init
I have got the same issue on mac 10.11, after a lot of struggling I found that the problem in installing unf_ext 0.0.7.2 gem
I have done the following from this answer
brew install coreutils
After that try reinstall fastlane again it should work again
I faced this issue in Fedora 30 i followed these steps:-
1-installed all dev tools using these commands
sudo dnf install #development-tools
sudo dnf install #rpm-development-tools
2- run sudo gem install fastlane -NV
Fastlane worked like a charm
hope it helped
I managed to install following way
Install ruby
sudo apt install ruby ruby-dev
Add following to top of your "~/.profile" file
export LC_ALL=en_US.UTF-8
export LANG=en_US.UTF-8
Check of any errors with source ~/.profile command. If there is not output means all is good.
Install Build essentials
sudo apt-get update
sudo apt-get install build-essential
Fastlane depends on Google API Clint lets install that first
sudo gem install google-api-client
Install Fastlane
sudo gem install fastlane -NV
Check your installation
fastlane -v
Credits: This and this article helped me.
Flutter and Github Actions for Android:
If you are setting up Github Actions for a Flutter project for android and run into this error in one of your steps, see the work flow below:
jobs:
release:
runs-on: ubuntu-latest
env:
LC_ALL: en_US.UTF-8
LANG: en_US.UTF-8
steps:
- uses: actions/checkout#v3
- name: Set up ruby
uses: ruby/setup-ruby#v1
- name: Setup Fastlane
working-directory: ./android # <-- Make sure you have this
run: bundle install
- name: Run Fastlane
working-directory: ./android. # <-- Make sure you have this
run: bundle exec fastlane android [lane name].
Make sure to setup the ruby/setup-ruby#v1 action correctly depending on your project. see the doc: https://github.com/ruby/setup-ruby
In my case I have not specified the ruby version because I am using the .ruby-version file in my project.
DO NOT INSTALL FASTLANE GLOBALLY
It is recommended that you use a Gemfile to define your dependency on Fastlane. This will clearly define the used Fastlane version, and its dependencies, and will also speed up using Fastlane.
Step 1: Install bundler using
sudo gem install bundler
so any time you wan run Fastlane
bundler exec fastlane ...
You can add fastlane path environment by add line
export PATH="$HOME/.fastlane/bin:$PATH"
to ~/.bash_profile or ~/.zsh_profile file (if you use zsh shell).
And final start new terminal session or reload using command source ~/.bash_profile or source ~/.zsh_profile (if you use zsh shell)
First,You need to check if you have the ~/.fastlane file. If you don't have the file, you can execute brew cask install fastlane command. If you already have it. Check other answers.
Get the full path of the fastlane executable from the command line:
which fastlane
Add it to the shell profile, restart shell.
So I want to debug my Phonegap webapp locally in Xcode.
I follow the step here and here, and launch in MAC CLI
$ sudo npm install -g phonegap
BUT install failed and CLI result get lots of errors with the first one is :
engine phonegap#2.9.0rc1-0.12.0: wanted: {"node":">=0.10.0"} (current: {"node":"v0.8.8","npm":"1.1.59"})
I understand my node version is too old : 0.8.8
node --version
I try to update but I am stuck with those 2 methods here and both in errors for me :
BREW
Tried Homebrew but did not work :
$ brew upgrade node
Error: node-0.8.8 already installed
NPM
As I found here
Upgrading Node.js to latest version
How do I update Node.js?
$ sudo npm install -g n
$ sudo n stable
sudo: n: command not found
In fact my bash_profile was missing the path to the n module as I found here:
cannot install npm? problems generating application
Edit your ~/.bash_profile. Add this export somewhere.
export PATH=/usr/local/bin:$PATH:/usr/local/share/npm/bin
I had the same issue and fixed it by upgrading node with brew, I just run
brew install --upgrade node
I have a problem installing grunt. All the documentation, and blog post tutorials, say that running:
npm install -g grunt
will then allow you to run grunt commands from the terminal.
I have a situation where grunt appears to install with no errors, but typing the command grunt in the terminal still gives:
-bash: grunt: command not found
What could I be doing wrong? And where could I find grunt to add it to my BASH profile manually?
Since Grunt version 0.4 (which was released 1 or 2 weeks ago) you need to install the grunt command line tool globally (if needed, use sudo before the command):
npm install -g grunt-cli
In your project location you then install the latest grunt version:
npm install grunt --save-dev
Option --save-dev will save the npm config in your package.json file, which makes it easier to install or reinstall the dependencies (using just npm install).
Try running the install with the verbose flag:
npm install -g grunt --verbose
You can see where it is being installed (something like /usr/local/share/npm/bin/grunt). Then check your path:
echo $PATH
If the path does not contain the install bin location, modify the path in your bash profile to include the location of the bin directory, then try grunt again in a fresh terminal.
UPDATE: Grunt 0.4 altered installation process. For 0.4 installs, see answer from asgoth below.
It seems that grunt in the current version 0.4.0 does not install a bin command. The last 0.3.x version is 0.3.17, which supports a bin command. To run grunt from the command line, you will want to install the grunt command line grunt-cli:
npm install -g grunt-cli --verbose
I had installed node using Homebrew and this was my solution:
set config for -g (GLOBAL) install directory directory: npm config
set prefix /Users/YOURNAME/.node/
make sure to edit PATH: sudo nano ~/.profile
add to path: export PATH=“/Users/YOURNAME/.node/bin:”$PATH
then update source: source ~/.profile
Following these steps will allow any packages installed using npm install -g somePKG to be placed in the correct location regardless of your current working directory. And by updating your $PATH correctly command line functions will work.
Information based on:
Fixing npm permissions - bit.ly/1CmIyqx
Currently I am using Node.js v0.6.16 on Mac OS X 10.7.4. Now I want to upgrade it to the latest Node.js v0.8.1. But after downloading and installing the latest package file from nodejs.org, I found that system is still using v0.6.16 instead of v0.8.1 when I typed "node -v" in a terminal. Is there any step that I have missed? Or, should I thoroughly uninstall the old version before installing the latest one?
BTW, I know that nvm can help to manage the nodejs package
https://github.com/creationix/nvm/
Is there any way to upgrade the Node.js without using it?
I have googled this problem, but it seems to me that there is no very clear answer to this question for the latest Node.js.
Here's how I successfully upgraded from v0.8.18 to v0.10.20 without any other requirements like brew etc, (type these commands in the terminal):
sudo npm cache clean -f (force) clear you npm cache
sudo npm install -g n install n (this might take a while)
sudo n stable upgrade to the current stable version
Note that sudo might prompt your password.
Additional note regarding step 3: stable can be exchanged for latest, lts (long term support) or any specific version number such as 0.10.20.
If the version number doesn't show up when typing node -v, you might have to reboot.
These instructions are found here as well: davidwalsh.name/upgrade-nodejs
More info about the n package found here: npmjs.com/package/n
More info about Node.js' release schedule: github.com/nodejs/Release
If you initially installed Node.js with Homebrew, run:
brew update
brew upgrade node
npm install -g npm
Or as a one-liner:
brew update && brew upgrade node && npm install -g npm
A convenient way to change versions is to use n:
brew install n
To install the latest version of Node.js with n:
n latest
Or, to install the latest LTS version with n:
n lts
Alternatively, you could use nvm instead of n:
brew install nvm
To install the latest version of Node.js with nvm:
nvm install node
If you installed via a package, then download the latest version from nodejs.org.
See Installing Node.js and updating npm.
Because this seems to be at the top of Google when searching for how to upgrade nodejs on mac I will offer my tip for anyone coming along in the future despite its age.
Upgrading via NPM
You can use the method described by #Mathias above or choose the following simpler method via the terminal.
sudo npm cache clean -f
sudo npm install -g n
sudo n stable
After which you may opt to confirm the upgrade
node -v
Your nodejs should have upgraded to the latest version. If you wish to upgrade to a specific one say v0.8.19 then instead of
sudo n stable
use
sudo n 0.8.19
EDIT
Avoid using sudo unless you need to. Refer to comment by Steve in the comments
Go to http://nodejs.org and download and run the installer.
It works now - for me at least.
You could install nvm and have multiple versions of Node.js installed.
curl https://raw.github.com/creationix/nvm/master/install.sh | sh
source ~/.nvm/nvm.sh
and then run:
nvm install 0.8.22 #(or whatever version of Node.js you want)
you can see what versions you have installed with :
nvm list
and you can change between versions with:
nvm use 0.8.22
The great thing about using NVM is that you can test different versions alongside one another. If different apps require different versions of Node.js, you can run them both.
I use Node version manager (called n) for it.
npm install -g n
then
n latest
OR
n stable
Simply go to node JS Website and install the latest version.
Do install latest version instead of the recommended stable version. It will give you freedom to use latest ES6 Features on node.
Can be Found here Node JS.
also to update npm, you will have to use this command.
sudo npm i -g npm#latest
All your projects will work fine.
Update: 2020 another good option is to use nvm for node which can then support multiple versions.
use nvm install --lts to always be able to update to latest node version use nvm ls-remote command to to check new versions of node.
Other option for mac :: brew update && brew install node && npm -g npm
Upgrade the version of node without installing any package, not even nvm itself:
sudo npx n stable
Explanations:
This approach is similar to Johan Dettmar's answer. The only difference is here the package n is not installed glabally in the local machine.
On macOS the homebrew recommended way is to run
brew install node
npm install -g npm#latest
I am able to upgrade the node using following command
nvm install node --reinstall-packages-from=node
There are five different ways (and counting?) to update Node.js on Mac:
Install the newer binary by downloading from nodejs.org
Update Node.js through Homebrew
Command: brew update && brew upgrade node
Update Node.js using Node Version Manager (NVM)
Command: nvm install {version} && nvm use {version}
Update Node.js using n package manager
Command: sudo n latest
Update Node.js through MacPorts
Command (same version update): sudo port selfupdate && sudo port upgrade {version}
If you are still using older MacOS version, it may be better to use lightweight, special-purpose package manager like n or nvm. You can refer to this sample use case for updating Node.js on old Mac (High Sierra).
Now this works for me:
sudo npm install -g n
sudo n latest
Happy code!
sadly, n doesn't worked for me. I use node version manager or nvm and it works like a charm. heres the link on how to install nvm: https://github.com/creationix/nvm#installation
nvm i 8.11.2 upgrade to latest LTS
nvm use 8.11.2 use it
node -v check your latest version
Go to the website nodejs.org and download the latest pkg then install.
it works for me
I used brew to upgrade my node. It has installed but it located in /usr/local/Cellar/node/5.5.0 and there is a default node in /usr/local/bin/node which bothers me. I don't want to make soft link because I don't really know how brew is organized.
So I download the pkg file, installed and I got this info:
Node.js was installed at
/usr/local/bin/node
npm was installed at
/usr/local/bin/npm
Make sure that /usr/local/bin is in your $PATH.
Now the upgrade is completed
Pretty Simple.
sudo npm i -g n
Then you can specify the version you want.
sudo n 12.8.0
Cheers!!
You can run but you can't hide... At the end you will be using NVM anyways.
You can just go to nodejs.org and download the newest package. It will update appropriately for you. NPM will be updated as well.
I think the simplest way to use the newest version of Node.js is to get the newest Node.js pkg file in the website https://nodejs.org/en/download/current/
if you want to use different version of Node.js you can use nvm or n to manage it.
sudo npm install -g n
and then
sudo n latest for linux/mac users
For Windows please reinstall node.
These 2 methods I tried are not working:
Use npm
sudo npm cache clean -f
sudo npm install -g n
sudo n stable
Manual install node from official website (https://nodejs.org/en/)
After trying, node -v still shows the old version of node.
Below method works for me:
Step 1: Install nvm (for more details: https://github.com/creationix/nvm#installation)
Open terminal and type this command:
curl -o- https://raw.githubusercontent.com/creationix/nvm/v0.33.11/install.sh | bash
Close terminal and reopen it.
Type this command to check if nvm is installed:
command -v nvm
Step 2: To download, compile, and install the latest release of node, type this:
nvm install node ("node" is an alias for the latest version)
To check if node gets the latest version (v10.11.0).
Installing the latest node also installs the latest npm.
Check if npm gets the latest version (6.4.1).
Easy nad Safe Steps
Step 1: Install NVM
brew install nvm
Step 2: Create a directory for NVM
mkdir ~/.nvm/
Step 3: Configure your environmental variables
nano ~/.bash_profile
PASTE BELOW CODE
export NVM_DIR=~/.nvm
source $(brew --prefix nvm)/nvm.sh
source ~/.bash_profile
Step 4: Double check your work
nvm ls
Step 5: Install Node
nvm install 9.x.x
Step6: Upgrade
nvm ls-remote
v10.16.2 (LTS: Dubnium)
v10.16.3 (Latest LTS: Dubnium) ..........
nvm install v10.16.3
Troubleshooting
Error Example #1
rm -rf /usr/local/lib/node_modules
brew uninstall node
brew install node --without-npm
echo prefix=~/.npm-packages >> ~/.npmrc
curl -L https://www.npmjs.com/install.sh | sh
https://www.chrisjmendez.com/2018/02/07/install/
Nvm
Nvm is a script-based node version manager. You can install it easily with a curl and bash one-liner as described in the documentation. It's also available on Homebrew.
Assuming you have successfully installed nvm. The following will install the latest version of node.
nvm install node --reinstall-packages-from=node
The last option installs all global npm packages over to your new version. This way packages like mocha and node-inspector keep working.
N
N is an npm-based node version manager. You can install it by installing first some version of node and then running npm install -g n.
Assuming you have successfully installed n. The following will install the latest version of node.
sudo n latest
Homebrew
Homebrew is one of the two popular package managers for Mac. Assuming you have previously installed node with brew install node. You can get up-to-date with formulae and upgrade to the latest Node.js version with the following.
1 brew update
2 brew upgrade node
MacPorts
MacPorts is the another package manager for Mac. The following will update the local ports tree to get access to updated versions. Then it will install the latest version of Node.js. This works even if you have previous version of the package installed.
1 sudo port selfupdate
2 sudo port install nodejs-devel
for latest release:
nvm install node
specific version:
nvm install 6.14.4
https://github.com/creationix/nvm
Use nvm to upgrade node as per the project requirement..
install nvm through homebrew..
brew update
brew install nvm
mkdir ~/.nvm
nano ~/.bash_profile
In your .bash_profile file (you may be using an other file, according to your shell), add the following :
export NVM_DIR=~/.nvm
source $(brew --prefix nvm)/nvm.sh
source ~/.bash_profile
echo $NVM_DIR
You can directly use curl to upgrade node to the latest version. Run the following command:
curl "https://nodejs.org/dist/latest/node-${VERSION:-$(wget -qO- https://nodejs.org/dist/latest/ | sed -nE 's|.*>node-(.*)\.pkg</a>.*|\1|p')}.pkg" > "$HOME/Downloads/node-latest.pkg" && sudo installer -store -pkg "$HOME/Downloads/node-latest.pkg" -target "/"
Reference: https://nodejs.org/en/download/package-manager/#macos
First install nvm with this command:
curl -o- https://raw.githubusercontent.com/nvm-sh/nvm/v0.39.1/install.sh | bash
credirts to #Saviah Kao
Then install node:
nvm install node --reinstall-packages-from=node
credits to #Elad
I had the same problem. This is what worked for me because I downloaded and installed node.js globally from the node.js website.
What I did was Give NVM (Node Version Manager) a try. Please do the commands in the following order in your terminal
curl -o- https://raw.githubusercontent.com/creationix/nvm/v0.33.11/install.sh | bash
command -v nvm
nvm install node
node -v (to confirm the update)
This is just to add some info for people who didn't have Node installed with Homebrew but getting that very error when trying to install packages with npm on Mac OS X.
I found this good article explaining how to completely remove Node whichever the way you originally installed it.
After node, npm and n were completely removed from my machine, I just reinstalled Node.js using the official .pckg installer from Node website and everything just went back to normal.
Hope this helps out someone.
An easy way is go straight to the website
https://nodejs.org/en/download/
Click download the latest version and install pkg file.
After that you will get the latest node and npm version
I'm using a Mac Mini M1. I just removed my very old packages of node.js and npm and decided to install them using homebrew. I found out that now brew install node also installs npm. FYI